REPORT ON THE GASTEROPODA. 469 



7. Turritella rosea, Quoy and Gaimard. 



Turrit ella rosea, Quoy and Gaimard, "Astrolabe," Zool., vol. iii. p. 136, pi. lv. figs. 24-26. 



,, Lamarck, Anim. s. vert. (cd. Desh.), vol. ix. p. 260, sp. 16. 



„ Kiener, Iconog., p. 32, sp. 25, pi, xii. fig. 2. 



„ Reeve, Conch. Icon., voL v. pi. viii. fig. 41. 



„ Hutton, Marine Moll. New Zealand, p. 29, No. 119. 



„ v. Martens, Crit. List MolL New Zealand, p. 27. 



,, Hutton, Manual, p. 83. 



Station 167a. June 27/1874. Lat. 41° 4' S., long. 174° 19' E. Queen Charlotte 

 Sound, near Long Island. 10 fathoms. Mud. 



Habitat. — New Zealand (Quoy and Gaimard, &c.) 



8. Turritella sinuata, Reeve. 



Turritella sinuata, Reeve, Conch. Icon., vol. v. pi. xi. fig. 62. 



„ „ Angas, Port Jackson Moll., Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1867, p. 210, No. 151. 



April 17 and 18, 1874. Port Jackson, Sydney. 2 to 10 fathoms. 

 May 1874. Port Jackson, Sydney. 6 to 7 fathoms. 



Station 163b. June 3, 1874. Lat. 33° 51' 15" S., long. 151° 22' 15" E. Port Jack- 

 son, Sydney. 30 to 35 fathoms. Hard ground. Bottom temperature, 63°'0. 



Habitat. — Port Jackson (Angas). 



This species is smooth like Turritella gunnii, Reeve, but the whorls here are of slower increase 

 longitudinally, are broader, the suture is less oblique and less deep, not being bordered by the pro- 

 jecting carina, which in that species appears at the top and bottom of each whorl. 



9. Turritella cordismei, Watson (PI. XXIX. fig. 1). 



Turritella cordismei, Watson, Prelim. Report, pt. 6, Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond., voL xv. p. 224. 



Station 162. April 2, 1874. Lat. 39° 10' 30" S., long. 146° 37' E. Off East Mon- 

 coeur Island, Bass Strait. 38 to 40 fathoms. Sand and shells. 



Shell. — A very narrow cone, ending in a small, slightly swollen, rounded, and depressed 

 point, rather glossy, of a suffused yellowish-brown colour with ruddy spots. Sculpture: 

 Longitudinals — there are many fine, close-set, deeply-curved lines of growth. Spirals — 

 on the edge of the base there are two strongish flatfish threads, the lower a little con- 

 tracted within the other ; they are parted by a flat open furrow, in the bottom of which 

 runs a fine thread : similar to this last, there are about six equally parted spiral threads 

 on the side of the whorls, and about seven, closer set, on the base ; 'besides these there are 

 several finer ones. The microscopic spirals of the genus are sharp and distinct. Colour 



